Department of Forensic Molecular Biology, Erasmus University Medical Center Rotterdam, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Curr Biol. 2010 Feb 23;20(4):R194-201. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.12.004.
The human history of Oceania is unique in the way that it encompasses both the first out-of-Africa expansion of modern humans to New Guinea and Australia as well as the last regional human occupation of Polynesia. Other anthropological peculiarities of Oceania include features like the extraordinarily rich linguistic diversity especially of New Guinea with about 1,000 often very distinct languages, the independent and early development of agriculture in the highlands of New Guinea about 10,000 years ago, or the long-term isolation of the entire region from the outside world, which lasted as long as until the 1930s for most of the interior of New Guinea. This review will provide an overview on the genetic aspects of human population history of Oceania and how some of the anthropological peculiarities are reflected in human genetic data. Due to current data availability it will mostly focus on insights from sex-specifically inherited mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosomal DNA, whereas more genome-wide autosomal DNA data are soon expected to add additional details or may correct views obtained from these two, albeit highly complex, genetic loci.
大洋洲的人类历史具有独特性,它既包含了现代人类首次从非洲向新几内亚和澳大利亚的扩张,也包含了波利尼西亚地区最后一次的人类居住。大洋洲的其他人类学特征还包括极其丰富的语言多样性,尤其是新几内亚,有大约 1000 种通常非常独特的语言;大约 10000 年前在新几内亚高地独立而早期发展的农业;以及整个地区长期与世隔绝,直到 20 世纪 30 年代,新几内亚的大部分内陆地区仍与世隔绝。这篇综述将概述大洋洲人类人口历史的遗传方面,以及人类遗传数据如何反映出一些人类学特征。由于目前数据的可用性,它将主要侧重于从性别特异性遗传的线粒体 DNA 和 Y 染色体 DNA 中获得的见解,而更多全基因组常染色体 DNA 数据有望很快提供更多细节,或者可能纠正从这两个遗传位点获得的观点,尽管它们非常复杂。